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<?php
namespace StringObject\Decorator;
use StringObject\AnyString;
class HTMLString extends TextString
{
public function nl2br()
return new self(\nl2br($this->raw, false));
raw
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
class MyClass { } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion:
class MyClass { public $foo; } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
\nl2br($this->raw, false)
string
object<StringObject\AnyString>
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:
function acceptsInteger($int) { } $x = '123'; // string "123" // Instead of acceptsInteger($x); // we recommend to use acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
}
public function nl2brX()
return new self(\nl2br($this->raw, true));
\nl2br($this->raw, true)
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: